Joshua Reynolds is the founder of the Ciberseguros Research Laboratory. He received his PhD in computer science in 2022 from the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign under the supervision of Dr. Michael Bailey. He completed his bachelor's degree in computer science from Brigham Young University, graduating magna cum laude in 2017. Joshua is an assistant professor in the CS department at New Mexico State University with a research focus on usable security and network security. He has collaborated with researchers at Google, UC Berkeley, Cloudflare, and Stanford on research in the areas of two-factor authentication (2FA), phishing, and transport-layer security (TLS). His work has been published in top academic security conferences including USENIX and IEEE S&P (Oakland) and the security track of ACM CHI.
Graduated from the Universidad Veracruzana in Mexico with a degree in mechanical engineering. Manuel is currently seeking his M.S. degree in Computer Science at New Mexico State University, and working in the Cyber Security Department under the supervision of Dr. Reynolds. His current work consists of systematizing threats to smart electric grids. His interests include Web Development, Python, Java and C#.
M.Sc Computer Science student and C/Unix Programmer at Gainwell Technologies. 9 years of experience in System Testing and aiming for a Cybersecurity career.
Graduated with a B.S in Computer Science from New Mexico State University and a Software Engineering bachelor's degree from the Universidad Autonoma de Chihuahua.
Anamika is a Master's Student in the Computer Science program at New Mexico State University. She works as a research assistant in the Ciberseguros Research Lab. Anamika holds an Undergraduate degree in Computer Science from India. She is a UI/UX designer and an Agile Software developer. She has three years of experience working for a leading Multinational Information Technology Company in India where she worked on a variety of web design projects.
Her research aims to explore how security practices impact web development and establish measures to put security and privacy protection in place for users.
Jonas is an undergraduate researcher, experimenting with new identity indicators for Web browsers.
Jack is an undergraduate researcher working on developing the phishing-resistant Crimson browser.
Bryan is a Ph.D. student collaborating with the Ciberseguros Lab, lending his psychology training to improving the rigor of our user studies.